A point gained, rather than two dropped for Arsenal at Anfield
Liverpool and Arsenal put on an absolute show on Easter Sunday as they battled to a 2-2 draw. Yes, there were errors, but the entertainment angle is what will stick with you. Biggest takeaway? Tempting as it might be to conclude that, by failing to hang on to a two-goal lead, Arsenal threw away two points against Liverpool, given the way the game turned in the second half, Arsenal could easily have lost this. And then the damage — both real and psychological — would have been substantially greater.
(Of course, they could also have won it, had Gabriel Martinelli‘s injury-time pass found its mark, but that’s football and that’s what makes it great.)
Let a two-nil lead slip and you’ve got to hold somebody responsible. Some blame Granit Xhaka for his clash with Trent Alexander-Arnold, citing it as some kind of turning point, stirring Anfield and Liverpool awake. A simpler explanation was Mohamed Salah halving the deficit just before the break and reopening the game.
We saw a different Liverpool in the second half, and Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta could do little to disrupt them. In fact, Arsenal managed just four shots for a total expected goals of 0.20 in the second half, and much of that was down to Liverpool’s relentlessness. So many people talk about wanting to see quality football and yet this was a captivating game despite it being strewn with errors. Gabriel Jesus missing at the far post, Oleksandr Zinchenko getting nutmegged, Martinelli’s wayward pass for Arsenal. Virgil Van Dijk’s mishit on the opener, Salah pulling his penalty wide and, of course, Ibrahima Konate (who was exceptional otherwise) somehow failing to put the ball into the back of the net from inches away. Errors and lack of quality are two different things. This game had plenty of the former and, still, the latter was not the issue.
Instead of errors, better to talk about heroes. Like Aaron Ramsdale, whose two saves — from Darwin Nunez and Salah — limited Liverpool to two goals. Or Roberto Firmino, coming on late, bags already packed to leave this summer and grabbing the late goal. There are more you can cite.
Arsenal can tell themselves that they have a poor record at Anfield and that, once Liverpool are roused (which hasn’t happened often this season), they’re hard to stop. And, yeah, in those circumstances, take the point. City’s victory the day before means that if they win their game in hand and the head-to-head, these teams will finish level on points. And goal difference favours City (and will probably favour them at the end of the season).
Equally though, Arsenal control their destiny and, unlike City, the head-to-head isn’t a must-win for them. I still think they have the edge, but, sure, the percentages just got a whole heck of a lot tighter.
As for Liverpool, manager Jurgen Klopp will want to channel that second half. This is how he needs them to play the rest of the season if they’re going to have a prayer of making up the 12-point gap and breaking into the top four to qualify for next season’s Champions League.
While we wait to learn more details from both sides, for now, Hatzidakis been dropped. Check out our reporting pending the outcome of the investigation.
Chukwueze show costs Real Madrid, but no need to freak out
Yes, it stings to give up a lead and lose at home, as Real Madrid did to Villarreal on Saturday. But context matters too. Madrid actually played well for the first hour or so (Vinicius, again, sparkling) and had a chance to go 3-1 up. With a home Champions League game coming up against Chelsea on Wednesday, they made a bunch of changes (Dani Carvajal, Toni Kroos, Eduardo Camavinga, Eder Militao, Luka Modric and Fede Valverde were all on the bench). They know they won’t win the league, trailing table-toppers Barcelona by 12 points, and this season will be defined by how they perform in the Copa del Rey and Champions League, while Villarreal are desperately chasing a top-four finish.
And, yeah, Villarreal’s Samu Chukwueze had a monster game. The Nigerian scored two goals and set up “El Comandante” Jose Luis Morales for the other. That last goal in particular isn’t anything you can legislate for. It’s just highlight reel stuff that you need to accept. Madrid can and should move on quickly from this result.
De Ligt wonder-strike delivers hard-fought, but deserved, Bayern win
We knew this was going to be a tough stretch for Bayern. Two weeks ago, Julian Nagelsmann was sacked as head coach, and Thomas Tuchel was brought in. Defeat to Freiburg in the German Cup. Freiburg away on Saturday in the league, followed by Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City on Tuesday. In situations like these, the margin of error is slim, especially against an opponent who can pack the box with the best of them.
It was critical to get the three points and, after a shaky first half, Bayern made the breakthrough with a long-range effort from Matthijs De Ligt. Stands to reason, on a day when Bayern took 22 shots on goal, it would be a defender trying his luck that made all the difference. Bayern put together a gaudy xG of 3.11 and had 66% possession, but Serge Gnabry and Sadio Mane were wasteful.
Jamal Musiala got his first start of the Thomas Tuchel era, playing in the hole alongside Thomas Mueller, which, I guess, is one way of shoe-horning both into the formation. It means giving up a central midfielder, which is fine against Freiburg, but clearly not a long-term plan (certainly not against City). But Tuchel is in react mode right now, which is fair enough: he hasn’t had time to work. Next season will need to be different if Bayern are to add up to more than the sum of their parts.